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About Matthew Wayne Selznick

Matthew Wayne Selznick is a fiction and non-fiction author, editor, creator, and consultant living in Long Beach, California. Best known for his award-nominated first novel Brave Men Run, he writes in a variety of genres and storyworlds. In his blog Scribtotum and podcast Sonitotum, he provides opinion, advice, and recommendations on staying human while creating a successful and healthy writing life, as well as personal insights, reflections, and observations.

It’s an exercise in accountability, transparency, beginner’s mind, and teaching what I learn. In that spirit, I’ve promised to share my progress on a weekly basis through “minisodes” of Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick.

This is the first update!

Listen to the episode for all the details… meanwhile, here are some significant statistics and other stuff:

The Autumn Project (2018): September 9 through September 15, 2018

The focus of this week was on writing background for the major and point-of-view characters, plus a little housekeeping, notes, and research / reading as necessary.

I got through nearly all the major characters, with just two minor but pivotal characters left to finish on Sunday. I also compiled a timeline of those characters’ lives up to the events of the novel.

Days Worked: Six

Total Time Worked: 14 hours, 42 minutes

Words Written: 12,004, not including the timeline, which was adapted from the prose background material

Approximately 2,000 words per day / 816 words per hour

Why Write So Much Character Background Material?

In writing these background notes on each character, I’m having a conversation with myself.

It’s a way to ask questions, and uncover questions I might not have thought to ask in the process.

By thinking through things like how old someone was when a critical moment occurred in their life, or what motivated them to take one action instead of another, I’m forced to consider their personalities, which will ultimately inform how I write that character in the actual book.

Additionally, when I’ve written something about the history of a character and it’s staring back at me, I can quickly spot shortcuts I’ve taken and cheats I’ve committed in my own thought process. It’s an odd thing, noticing when an element is just not right, or is too simplistic, or doesn’t make sense when set against other elements… it’s like not being able to walk past a crooked picture frame hanging on a wall. You have to fix it, or you’re just lazy.

Perhaps the niftiest bi-product of writing these free-form, stream-of-consciousness essays is that each one, I’ve discovered, contains synopses for at least one short story. I could write a prequel collection, or a serial, presenting the origin tales (and other tales) from all of the principle characters in Light of the Outsider. Or I could have someone else do it… and this is how the seeds of a personal creative franchise are planted!

Lessons Learned

I surrendered Wednesday. I have a standing familial obligation on that day, and there just isn’t enough energy or time left over to dedicate to a couple hours of creative thought.

Also, I’m still working out the best time of day to tackle the two to three hours an Autumn Project (2018) session usually consumes. Mid-afternoon is nice, but on weekdays, that cuts right in the middle of my client work. I’ve been starting at six o’clock in the evening, and that’s not bad, but I’ve run into a little bit of fatigue around then, too. I’m sure food, water, exercise, and sleep all factor in. I’m working it out.

Finally… and you’d think I’d know this by now: everything takes longer. More often than not, I’m scrambling to get into Autumn Project mode and can barely get the webcam turned on when it’s time. I need to stop whatever I’m doing at least forty five minutes before the scheduled writing session, not twenty to thirty minutes before.

Watch as I Write Light of the Outsider!

Remember, you can support the Autumn Project (2018), the Sonitotum podcast, and watch the live video feed of every writing session for Light of the Outsider when you become my patron for just $3.00 per month. Every session lets you see exactly what I’m seeing on my computer monitor while I work, so you can literally see every spoiler-filled detail and behind the scenes moment as I write this book.

Pledge just $5.00 per month and you’ll get all the benefits of the $3.00 pledge plus the ability to watch the writing session videos any time you want via the archive library, plus more patron-only benefits!

Making the Episode

Every episode of Sonitotum takes considerable time to record, edit, and produce, including writing these show notes and creating the graphics and social media assets.

Equipment and Software

For those who are interested (folks sometimes ask), here’s what I used (and use) to make this episode. I have affiliate arrangements with some of these products and services. If you make a purchase when you click through using my links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. It’s a great way to help support the podcast… so thank you!

I’ll continue to stay accountable throughout the rest of 2018 with these quick weekly minisodes updating my progress on Light of the Outsider.

Stay tuned for more full-length episodes of Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick, too, including upcoming shows on the value of living poetically, the necessity of responsible self-promotion, and more! I’ve got thoughts I want to think at you!

Don’t forget to subscribe to Sonitotum wherever and however you get your podcasts, and if you have a moment, please rate and review the show in your podcast app, too! Thanks!